ABSTRACT

The traditional Islamic boarding schools known as pesantren are crucial centres of Muslim learning and culture within Indonesia, but their cultural significance has been underexplored. This book is the first to explore understandings of gender and Islam in pesantren and Sufi orders in Indonesia. By considering these distinct but related Muslim gender cultures in Java, Lombok and Aceh, the book examines the broader function of pesantren as a force for both redefining existing modes of Muslim subjectivity and cultivating new ones. It demonstrates how, as Muslim women rise to positions of power and authority in this patriarchal domain, they challenge and negotiate "normative" Muslim patriarchy while establishing their own Muslim "authenticity." The book goes on to question the comparison of Indonesian Islam with the Arab Middle East, challenging the adoption of expatriate and diasporic Middle Eastern Muslim feminist discourses and secular western feminist analyses in Indonesian contexts. Based on extensive fieldwork, the book explores configurations of female leadership, power, feminisms and sexuality to reveal multiple Muslim selves in pesantren and Sufi orders, not only as centres of learning, but also as social spaces in which the interplay of gender, politics, status, power and piety shape the course of life.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

De-colonizing Islam and Muslim feminism

part |58 pages

Female leadership and Muslim agency

chapter |24 pages

Between Sufi and Salafi subjects

Female leadership, spiritual power and gender matters in Lombok

chapter |17 pages

Leadership and authority

Women leading dayah in Aceh

chapter |15 pages

Gender in contemporary Acehnese dayah

Moving beyond docile agency?

part |36 pages

Female spiritual authority in Sufi orders and mystical groups

chapter |20 pages

When wahyu comes through women

Female spiritual authority and divine revelation in mystical groups and pesantren-Sufi orders

chapter |14 pages

Reframing the gendered dimension of Islamic spirituality

Silsilah and the ‘problem' of female leadership in tarekat

part |32 pages

Sexuality, shari'ah and power

chapter |18 pages

The tawdry tale of ‘Syech' Puji and Luftiana

Child marriage and polygamy on the boundary of the pesantren world